Chimp denied a legal guardian

An Austrian judge turned down a request this week to appoint a woman as legal guardian of a chimpanzee.

The decision is a blow to a growing movement in Europe attempting to give apes some of the legal rights of humans, such as
protection from being owned. But proponents of ape rights say they will appeal the decision and continue fighting for the
cause elsewhere in Europe. In Spain, for example, they are pushing for a national law that would extend some human rights
to apes.

Paula Casal, a vice-president of the Great Ape Project branch in Spain, says the Spanish law, first proposed a year ago, might
finally be put to a vote soon in parliament. "After that battle is won, then we will have momentum to start organizing groups
in other countries to do the same," said Casal, a philosopher at the University of Reading, UK.

The goal of the Great Ape Project is to extend basic human rights to apes, such as the right to life, protection of individual
liberty and prohibition of torture.

Apes are no longer used in most western nations for research, with the United States being a major exception. New Zealand
passed an ape rights law in 1999, backed by the Great Ape Project, which prohibits using apes in any experiments that would
benefit humans.

The proposed Spanish law goes beyond this, additionally banning private ownership of apes, or their use for employment or
entertainment. The state would be responsible for putting the more then 200 apes registered in Spain in sanctuaries. Furthermore,
as written it would require the Spanish government to work towards convening an international forum of developed and developing
nations on the issue of protecting the rights of great apes.

Wrong papers

In the Austrian case, the Association Against Animal Factories (VGT) earlier this year went to court in an attempt to name
a legal guardian for Hiasl (pronounced Hee-sel), who was taken in 1982 from western Africa with several other young chimps.
The chimps were to be shipped to a research laboratory, but did not have proper documentation and were intercepted by customs
officials, according to Martin Balluch, president of the VGT. Two of them, Hiasl and Rosi, ended up at the Vienna Animal Protection
Shelter.

Balluch says they are worried that the shelter may no longer be able to afford to keep Hiasl and Rosi, and his group wants
to ensure the chimps do not end up in a zoo or a laboratory. "If they are sent outside of Austria, then anything could happen
to them," he says.

The VGT decided the best strategy was to seek a legal guardian for Hiasl, and then, if they won, use that as legal precedent
to appoint a legal guardian for Rosi and other chimps in Austria, Balluch says.

In the lawsuit, Paula Stibbe, a UK citizen living in Austria and in regular contact with Hiasl since 1999, was put forward
to be Hiasl's guardian. Stibbe, who still visits Hiasl regularly, says: "I consider him a friend. He greets me with kisses,
hugs."

Support payments

Before filing the lawsuit, Balluch consulted with international experts and ape supporters such as Jane Goodall and US animal
rights lawyer/author Stephen Wise. They chose the legal-guardian strategy because it would mean Hiasl could not be sold, Balluch
says. And a lawsuit could then be filed on Hiasl's behalf against the laboratory that tried to import him, in order to obtain
support payments. "Hiasl is now dependent on the goodwill of others," Balluch says. "If he were still in the west African
jungle, he would not need money. It was the company that brought him here and started this mess."

In a trustee court hearing on 24 April, the judge denied the request. She said that if she appointed a legal guardian for
a chimp, then this might create the public perception that humans with court-appointed legal guardians are at the same level
as animals.

Balluch says his group will appeal the decision to a higher district court. He notes that many other chimps from the same
research laboratory are in a sanctuary north of Vienna. Donations for that sanctuary are drying up, Balluch says. If Hiasl
eventually wins the right to guardianship, then Balluch says he "would not hesitate to expand that to the 44 chimps north
of Vienna."